Timeline: Missing Iranian nuclear scientist surfaces

June 2009 – Shahram Amiri, a university researcher working for Iran’s Atomic Energy Organization, goes missing during a pilgrimage to Saudi Arabia. Iran’s Press TV said Amiri was a researcher at Tehran’s Malek Ashtar University.

September 2009 – The IAEA says Iran, three months after Amiri’s disappearance, disclosed the existence of its second uranium enrichment site, near the central holy Shi’ite city of Qom, further heightening tension over the Islamic state’s atomic activities. Construction of the plant began in 2006.

October 2009 – Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki says Iran has found documents that prove U.S. involvement in the disappearance.

December 2009 – Iran accuses Saudi Arabia of handing over the scientist to the United States.

March 2010 – Media reports that Amiri defected as part of a long-planned operation to get him to leave Iran and resettle in the United States.

– An ABC report says Amiri has been extensively debriefed since his defection and says he helped to confirm U.S. intelligence assessments about the Iranian nuclear programme.

June 2010 – Iran’s state television shows a video of what it says is the missing nuclear scientist declaring he was kidnapped and taken to the United States where he was “tortured.”

– “I was kidnapped from Medina in a joint operation by the American intelligence service … and Saudi Arabia,” Amiri says, speaking in Farsi, in footage which showed him sitting behind a computer wearing headphones. Amiri says in the video he is in Arizona and that the footage was taken on April 5.

– Shortly after that footage, a second video appears on the Internet, also purporting to be Amiri, in which he says he is actually studying in the United States.

– Iran summons the Swiss ambassador in Tehran and hands over documents which it says shows the missing scientist has been kidnapped by the United States.

– On June 29, in a third video, a man describing himself as Amiri said he had fled from U.S. “agents” and was in hiding, urging human rights groups to help him to return to Iran.

July 2010 – Iran has sent to U.S. authorities more documents about the disappearance of the scientist, demanding his release, the foreign ministry says on July 3.

– “The documents about Shahram Amiri’s abduction by the CIA have been delivered to the Swiss embassy as the preservers of America’s interests,” according to Iran’s IRNA.

– The scientist has taken refuge in the Iranian interests section of Pakistan’s embassy in Washington, a Pakistan foreign ministry official says.

Iranian nuclear scientist defects to U.S. – report

Wed, Mar 31 08:37 AM

An Iranian nuclear scientist who has been missing since June has defected to the United States and is helping the CIA, ABC news reported on Tuesday.

Citing unnamed sources briefed on the defection, the network said Shahram Amiri, a nuclear physicist in his early 30s, defected as part of a long-planned operation to get him to leave Iran and resettle in the United States.

A CIA spokeswoman declined to comment.

Amiri, a university researcher working for Iran’s Atomic Energy Organization, disappeared during a pilgrimage to Mecca in June, three months before Iran disclosed the existence of its second uranium enrichment site near the city of Qom.

In December, Tehran accused Saudi Arabia of handing Amiri over to the United States.

The ABC report said Amiri has been extensively debriefed since his defection and said he helped confirm U.S. intelligence assessments about the Iranian nuclear program.

(Reporting by Deborah Charles; editing by Mohammad Zargham)

‘Awakened’ Hizbullah can unleash greater terror on America than Al-Qaeda: US expert

Jerusalem, June 26 (ANI): A top US counter-terrorism official has claimed that Hizbullah is capable of inflicting greater damage on the United States than the Al-Queda, and direct US military operations against Iran or the Hizbullah leadership may trigger exactly that.

“Hizbullah at the strategic level, with its state sponsors, more or less decided not to attack the United States interests directly in the continental United States at all. But our assessment is, if they ever change their minds, they have the capacity to inflict terrible damage on the United States,” The Jerusalem Post quoted Deputy Commissioner for Counter terrorism Richard Falkenrath of the New York Police Department, as saying.

“We haven’t seen it yet, but I don’t like to be in a position where our defense lies in the strategic decision of a terrorist organization,” he added.

Speaking at the Washington Institute for Near East Affairs this week, Falkenrath said he had seen various intelligence assessments on what would cause Hizbullah to change that strategic decision and that “direct US military operations against the Hizbullah leadership are regarded as one,” as well as attacks against its state sponsor, Iran.

So long the Hizbullah has remained “dormant,” Al-Qaida remained the most serious external terrorist threat to America, Falkenrath said, adding that Obama administration was not sufficiently emphasizing terrorism prevention in their budget priorities.

“We’ve seen these budgets slowly trickle down. The levels are shrinking; the competition for grant funding is becoming more fierce; and, frankly, the bureaucracy and the bureaucratic process that we have to go through to actually get the monies dispersed and spend them is becoming ever more onerous,” he said

Another terrorism expert, Daniel Byman of the Brookings Institution’s Saban Center, said Hizbullah had so far calculated that it wouldn’t be worth the blowback from the United States when its main agenda focuses on Israel.

“From their point of view, the United States is a place you raise money and can use for propaganda,” the paper quoted Byman, as saying. (ANI)

North Korea is a full-fledged nuclear power with a capacity to wipe out Japan, S. Korea

London, Apr 24 (ANI): North Korea has become a full-fledged nuclear power with the capacity to wipe out entire cities in Japan and South Korea, a confidential report prepared by world’s intelligence agencies and defence experts states.

This new reality has emerged in off-hand remarks and in single sentences buried in lengthy reports.

Increasing numbers of authoritative experts from the head of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Mohamed ElBaradei to the US Defence Secretary Robert Gates are admitting that North Korea has miniaturised nuclear warheads to the extent that they can be launched on medium-range missiles, according to intelligence briefings.

This puts it ahead of Iran in the race for nuclear attack capability and seriously alters the balance of power between North Korea’s large, but poorly equipped military and the South Korean and US forces ranged against it, The Times reports.

“North Korea has nuclear weapons, which is a matter of fact. I don’t like to accept any country as a nuclear weapon state we have to face reality,” ElBaradei said.

North Korea carried out an underground nuclear test in 2006, but until recently foreign governments believed that such nuclear devices were useless as weapons because they were too unwieldy to be mounted on a missile.

Now North Korea’s supreme leader, Kim Jong Il, has the potential to kill millions in Japan as well as the South, and to lay waste US bases and airfields in both countries.

It will force military strategists to rethink plans for war in Korea and significantly increase the potential costs of any intervention in a future Korean war.

Daniel Pinkston, of the International Crisis Group think-tank, said that he has been shown detailed intelligence assessments of the new nuclear capability by a foreign government.

Last December, the US Forces Joint Command published an annual report, which, for the first time, listed North Korea, alongside China, India, Pakistan and Russia, as one of Asia’s nuclear powers.

The US Government insisted that this did not reflect its official policy – but then James Schlesinger, a former US Defence Secretary, delivered a report by a Pentagon task force saying the same thing. (ANI)